Stop blowing into your game cartridges

Stop blowing into your game cartridges

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Stop blowing into your game cartridges”.
Remember the first time someone told you to blow into your cartridge to fix a buggy game. Does blowing into your cartridge actually make anything better, (, electronic music ), It’s the sort of thing that sounds like it makes sense. Mario isn’t working. There must be some dust in the way.

To find out whether or not blowing into a cartridge would actually help things or make them worse. I talked to Christopher Grant the Editor-in-Chief of Polygon and an expert in retro gaming hardware., When your NES didn’t read the cartridge when you put it in and it blinked the red blinking light. If you blew on it – and you put it back in and you got it, you blew it just right to get that one piece of dust off it would work. People did this over and over again thinking that this was the solution. That dust was the problem when, in fact, all they were doing was re-inserting the game over and over again, and that the sort of placebo effect made it feel like the blowing was doing something when, in fact it was just the reseating of the cartridge that did It., Okay, so blowing into the cartridge, doesn’t fix anything, but it’s okay. If I still do it anyway’cause, I’m used to doing it right. You should not blow into the cartridge at all. (, electronic music ), So blowing into cartridges not only doesn’t help anything but adding moisture from your breathe into the mix can actually make things worse. Corroding, the copper connectors and damaging your games and your console in the long run.

Stop blowing into your game cartridges

Nintendo, actually starting warning against this behavior with later consoles.. The Super Nintendo included a note on the back of each game, saying that cartridges should be regularly cleaned, but only with the proper cleaning kit. And the Nintendo 64 went one step further outright, stating on the back of each game in large block letters.

Stop blowing into your game cartridges

“ Do not blow on the edge connector.” The myth dates back to the original NES, which used a zero insertion, force or ZIF, and while ZIF slots are great for making it easy to swap in and out a game because, like the name suggests, it doesn’t require Much force to slot it in it also means that if the contacts in the cartridge aren’t properly connecting you’re gon na get stuck with a glitched out screen instead.. But there is still a grain of truth to the whole thing, because, while the actual blowing on the cartridges didn’t do anything simply taking the game out and re-inserting it as part of that process, gave you another chance to have the contacts properly. Connect letting your game work right, which may be the origin of why people assumed that the blowing was working in the first place., So yeah don’t blow into your cartridges, but if you’ve got a retro console that isn’t working, there are solutions out there that might actually Help you get your games up and running again that don’t involve you spitting on them.

(, blows air ) [, Director ]. That was good! That was good.. Okay, one more. ( blowing air ) [ Director ], Don’t blow in it.

( laughing ) .